TEPIC, Mexico (AP) — Mexico’s president-elect kicked off a nationwide tour Sunday with his new head of security in tow: a restaurant owner named Daniel Asaf who will coordinate a civilian brigade in lieu of the Mexican equivalent of the U.S. Secret Service.

Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who takes office Dec. 1, introduced Asaf to reporters at Mexico City’s international airport before departing for Tepic, capital of the western state of Nayarit. He said Asaf will organize 20 civilian assistants who will accompany him five at a time so he can interact with voters without getting squashed.

The wildly popular Lopez Obrador enjoys engaging with everyday Mexicans and is mobbed daily by well-wishers. He shakes hands. He poses for pictures. And he pauses to listen to pleas that range from tearful requests for assistance locating kidnapped or missing loved ones to humble requests for jobs.

Lopez Obrador campaigned across Mexico for 13 years with two failed bids for the presidency before winning the highest office in a landslide July vote. He visited remote and dangerous hamlets with a modest entourage.

His head of security between 2003 and 2011 was Polimnia Romana, a veterinarian who assembled a small group of female police to handle crowd control. The female force’s light touch with children and women who approached Lopez Obrador earned them the nickname “the gazelles.”

Romana finds it “very worrisome” that Lopez Obrador wants to entrust his safety to someone without security experience as he nears the presidency. Lopez Obrador “cares too much about public opinion,” she said, adding that he is “behaving like a candidate who is looking for votes.”

Mexican presidents are only eligible to serve a single six-year term. The country’s constitution spells out various succession plans should a sitting president be incapacitated, depending on his time in office. Interim leadership could fall to the interior minister or head of the Senate until general elections are held again.

Mexico is a dangerous place for politicians. More than 145 politicians — most local figures — have been killed in Mexico over the past year.

Mexican security experts say Lopez Obrador is taking on too much risk. They point to this month’s stabbing on a crowded street of Brazilian presidential candidate Jair Bolsonaro and to the 1994 assassination of Mexican presidential hopeful Luis Colosio as proof that you never know who might have murderous intentions. Alleged assailants in both cases have been painted as lone wolfs acting out of mental instability and disagreement with the politicians’ messages.

Lopez Obrador is “playing with fire,” said Alejandro Schtulmann, president of the Mexico City-based political risk firm EMPRA.

Hope also pointed out that the Mexican secret service does more than guarantee the personal security of the president. It secures his communications and the installations he will visit, while handling logistics and acting as point-people for visits by international leaders.

Lopez Obrador acknowledged Sunday that he would like a more orderly way to feel the pulse of the electorate, but he also reiterated a desire to continue “collecting the feelings of the people” via direct contact.

Standing before a cheering crowd of thousands in Tepic, Lopez Obrador lambasted the way the 8,000-strong official Mexican security force cordons off presidents.

“You are all going to take care of me,” he shouted to the crowd. “The people will take care of me.”

Many Lopez Obrador supporters, though, are also concerned for his safety. The incoming president has vowed to tackle corruption, which could pit him against powerful vested interests that some fear might seek to harm him.

Myrna Manjarrez, a teacher who applauded Lopez Obrador in Tepic, thinks his personal security plan is dangerous but doable with the help of regular Mexicans.

“It can work because he’s a person who is very attentive with the public. He’s a likable person,” she said.

Bernardo Narvaez, a retiree who attended the rally, hopes Lopez Obrador changes his mind and incorporates professional bodyguards once he becomes president.

“He and the people close to him should find a way to take care of him and protect him as much as possible,” said Narvaez.

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Associated Press writer Sofia Ortega reported this story in Tepic and AP writer Amy Guthrie reported from Mexico City. AP writers Peter Orsi and Maria Verza in Mexico City contributed to this report.